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The following is a list of Canadian specialty channels, premium television services, and most other channels not available via terrestrial television. English [ edit ]
This is a list of broadcast television stations serving cities in the Canadian province of Quebec. [1] Digital channels as of November 2011. City of licence Analog
Carried on cable via Comcast in Royal Oak and Troy, in TV guide listings throughout Metro area. Also available over the air in most cities in Metro Detroit. Detroit, Michigan: CKCO-DT: Kitchener: CTV: Listed in local Detroit TV guides CKCO-TV-3 ch. 42 transmitter from Oil Springs/Sarnia: Detroit, Michigan: CIII-DT-22: Paris-Toronto: Global
Moose TV is a Canadian television sitcom, airing on Showcase in the 2007-2008 television season. The series stars Adam Beach as George Keeshig, a Cree from the fictional community of Moose in northern Quebec , who returns home after a decade living in Toronto to become manager of the local community television station.
In 1966, the network's affiliates (which by this time included CJON-TV in St. John's, CKCO-TV in Kitchener, CHAB-TV/CHRE-TV in Moose Jaw/Regina, and the network's first and only U.S. affiliate, WNYP-TV in Jamestown, New York) sought permission to buy the network and run it as a cooperative. The BBG was initially skeptical of the proposal.
Quebec is predominantly francophone, with its anglophone minority centred primarily around the city of Montreal. Accordingly, Quebec has only one station affiliated with each of Canada's major English-language broadcast networks. CBMT-DT (CBC Television) CFCF-DT ; CJNT-DT ; CKMI-DT
In May 2003, Dieter Kohler was granted approval from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to launch a television specialty channel called The Hunting Channel, which was described as service that "would be devoted to all aspects of hunting and fishing. It would include programming that educates the viewer on the ...
A few months later, the channel launched its first high definition channel, in the United States, on Dish Network. [4] The Canadian channel launched its HD feed on September 2, 2010 on Rogers Cable. [5] [6] Despite the many firsts with Rogers Cable, the distributor dropped both the SD and HD channels on June 1, 2017.